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fill
verb (filled , filling )
1 (also fill something up) to make it full fill the bath with water .
2 intr (also fill up) to become full The petrol tank filled up quickly .
3 to take up all the space in something.
4 to satisfy (a need); to perform (a role) satisfactorily.
5 (sometimes fill up) to occupy (time).
6 (also fill something in or up) to put material into (a hole, cavity, etc) to level the surface.
7 to appoint someone to (a position or post of employment).
8 a to take up (a position or post of employment);
b to work in (a job), sometimes temporarily She filled the post for six months .
9 intr said of a sail: to billow out in the wind.
noun
1 anything used to fill something.
2 material such as stones, gravel, etc used to fill a space to a required level.
[Anglo-Saxon fyllan ]
eat one's fill to consume enough food to be satisfied.
have had one's fill of something or someone to have reached a point at which one desires no further experience of it or them.
fill someone in to inform them fully; to brief them.
fill something in
1 to write information as required onto (a form, etc).
2 said of a drawing: to complete it.
fill in for someone to take over their work temporarily. See also fill-in.
fill out to put on weight and become fatter or plumper.
fill something out
1 to enlarge it satisfactorily; to amplify it.
2 chiefly N Am to fill in (a form, etc).
fill something up to fill in (a form, etc).
fill-in
noun someone who temporarily takes the place of another; a substitute. See also fill in for someone at fill.
filler
noun
1 a person or thing that fills.
2 a paste-like substance used for filling cracks or holes, usually in walls of buildings.
3 a material or substance used to add bulk or weight to something, or to fill a gap or space, etc.
4 a relatively unremarkable article, photograph, clip, etc used to fill a gap between main features in a newspaper, or a TV or radio programme.
fillet
noun
1
a a piece of meat without bone, taken as an undercut of the sirloin, or the fleshy part of the thigh pork fillet ;
b (in full fillet steak) the most highly valued cut of beef, cut from the lowest part of the loin;
c the flesh of a fish without its bone salmon fillet .
2 a thin narrow strip of wood, metal or other material.
3 a ribbon, band, strip of lace, etc worn in the hair or round the neck.
4 archit a narrow flat band, often between mouldings.
verb (filleted , filleting )
1
a to cut fillets from (meat or fish);
b to remove the bones from (a fish);
c to prepare (meat) as fillets, often by beating or rolling it.
2 to decorate with or as if with a fillet.
[14c: from Latin filum thread]
filling
noun
1 dentistry a substance such as amalgam, gold or composite resin, that is inserted into a cavity drilled in a decaying tooth.
2 food put inside a pie, sandwich, etc.
adjective said of food, a meal, etc: substantial and satisfying.

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